This type belongs to the broad "Kapostaler Gruppe" of imitative Celtic coinage circulating across the Middle Danube region, derived ultimately from Macedonian prototypes introduced through trade and mercenary payment. Celtic warriors serving as hired soldiers in the armies of the Diadochi — the successors to Alexander — were paid in Macedonian silver, and their communities back home copied what they received. The process of imitation compressed over generations until prototypes became nearly unrecognizable.
Göbl's classification places this specific die pairing within a tightly defined subgroup, which allows relative chronological sequencing even without a fixed mint attribution.
This type belongs to the broad "Kapostaler Gruppe" of imitative Celtic coinage circulating across the Middle Danube region, derived ultimately from Macedonian prototypes introduced through trade and mercenary payment. Celtic warriors serving as hired soldiers in the armies of the Diadochi — the successors to Alexander — were paid in Macedonian silver, and their communities back home copied what they received. The process of imitation compressed over generations until prototypes became nearly unrecognizable.
Göbl's classification places this specific die pairing within a tightly defined subgroup, which allows relative chronological sequencing even without a fixed mint attribution.